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Instructor: Tobias Marriage (marriage@pha.jhu.edu)
Instructor: Tobias Marriage (marriage@pha.jhu.edu)


TAs: Arpit Gupta (arpit@pha.jhu.edu)
TAs: Arpit Gupta (arpit@pha.jhu.edu), Damien Benveniste (dbenveni@pha.jhu.edu)


===Recommended Texts===


====Recommended Books====
*Bevington & Robinson, ''Data Reduction and Error Analysis for the Physical Sciences''
*Press, Teukolsky, Vetterling, Flannery, ''Numerical Recipes in C'' (Available online)
*Lamport, ''LaTeX: A Document Preparation System''


Bevington & Robinson, ''Data Reduction and Error Analysis for the Physical Sciences''
===General Description===


====Course Schedule====
In this class you will complete seven experiments. You'll do the experiments in groups. Separately you will analyze data and submit lab reports. The first experiment is short and will be done in the first week. The rest of the experiments are more involved and you will have two weeks to complete each.


===Lab Reports===


Lab reports constitute the backbone of the course. The reports are to be created on a computer with computer generated graphics, plots, etc. The document preparation system for the reports is LaTeX. The computers in the PUC lab have various installations of LaTeX editors/compilers. You can also download freeware for your personal computers. The lab reports should have an abstract, an introduction, description of the experiment (apparatus and procedure), description of the analysis, discussion of results, a conclusion (including future directions), and a bibliography. Lab reports will be collected on even weeks (See schedule.).
The course is fast paced and you'll want to stay ahead of schedule. You should begin writing your lab report in the first week of the class. You should plan to have the introduction finished by the end of the first week together with first drafts of all figures. A standard strategy is to create your figures first in order to guide the body of the text.
The first three lab reports will be "refereed" in the sense that we'll return them with comments on an initial draft of the reports after which you will resubmit the final draft of the reports.
====Latex References====
*[[Arpit's Presentation]] on LaTeX.
*Damien's presentation:
**[[media:Latex_Tutorial.txt]]
**[[media:Latex_Tutorial.jpg]]
**[[media:Latex_Tutorial.pdf]]
*A Not Too Short Introduction to LaTeX: [[media:not_too_short.pdf]]
===Lab Presentations===
Lab presentations will be given on odd weeks (See schedule.). These consist in a few slides (saved as PDF) describing the experiment and a reduction of the corresponding data with preliminary conclusions and/or questions. Presentations should be sent to the instructor (marriage@pha.jhu.edu) the night before for efficient projector setup. Presentations are 10 minutes with 5 minutes for questions/comments. Participation in discussion is an important component of the presentations.
Sample presentation: [[media:Marriage_h_e_experiment.pdf]]
===Course Schedule===


;Jan 31: Introductory Lecture; [[PE 2011 Schedule | Photoelectric Effect]]
;Jan 31: Introductory Lecture; [[PE 2011 Schedule | Photoelectric Effect]]
;Feb 7: First Lab
;Feb 7: First Lab; Photoelectric report due
;Feb 14: First Lab Presentations, Latex Tutorial
;Feb 14: First Lab Presentations, Latex Tutorial
;Feb 15: Second Lab Begins, First Report (Draft) Due
;Feb 21: Second Lab Begins, First Report (Draft) Submitted
;Feb 21: Second Lab Presentations, First Report (Draft) Returned  
;Feb 28: Second Lab Presentations, First Report (Draft) Returned  
;Feb 28: Third Lab Begins, Second Report (Draft) Due, First Report (Final) Due
;Mar 7: Third Lab Begins, Second Report (Draft) Submitted, First Report (Final) Submitted
;Mar 7:  Third Lab Presentations, Second Report (Draft) Returned
;Mar 14:  Third Lab Presentations, Second Report (Draft) Returned
;Mar14: Fourth Lab Begins, Third Report (Draft) Due, Second Report (Final) Due
;Mar 7:  Fourth Lab Presentations, Third Report (Draft) Returned
;Mar 21:  Spring Break
;Mar 21:  Spring Break
;Mar 28: Fifth Lab Begins, Third Report (Final) Due, Fourth Report (Final) Due
;Mar 29: Fourth Lab Begins, Third Report (Draft) Submitted, Second Report (Final) Submitted
;Apr 4: Fifth Lab Presentations
;Apr 4: Fourth Lab Presentations, Third Report (Draft) Returned
;Apr 11: Sixth Lab Begins, Fifth Report Due
;Apr 12: Fifth Lab Begins, Third Report (Final) Submitted, Fourth Report (Final) Submitted
;Apr 18: Sixth Lab Presentations
;Apr 18: Fifth Lab Presentations
;Apr 25: Seventh Lab Begins
;Apr 26: Sixth Lab Begins, Fifth Report Submitted
;May 2: Seventh Lab Presentations
;May 2: Sixth Lab Presentations
;May 6: Seventh Lab Report Due at Midnight
;May 10: Sixth Report Submitted
 
===Labs===
 
Responsibility for assistance and grading of labs will be split between the professor and TAs in the following manner:
 
;Marriage: Brownian Motion (BM), Nuclear Spectroscopy (NS), Franck-Hertz (FH)
;Benveniste: Rutherford Scattering (RS), Millikan Oil Drop (MOD), Hall Effect (HE)
;Gupta: NMR, Muon Lifetime (ML), Zeeman Effect (ZE)
 
The labs are done in [[groups 2011 | groups]] according to the following schedule:
 
{| border="1" style="text-align:center;"
|
| Lab 1
| Lab 2
| Lab 3
| Lab 4
| Lab 5
| Lab 6
|-
| G1
| NMR
| NS
| ML
| MOD
| BM
| HE
|-
| G2
| NS
| RS
| ZE
| HE
| NMR
| MOD
|-
| G3
| ML
| MOD
| BM
| FH
| ZE
| RS
|-
| G4
| ZE
| HE
| NMR
| RS
| ML
| NS
|-
| G5
| HE
| FH
| MOD
| ML
| RS
| ZE
|-
| G6
| FH
| NMR
| HE
| BM
| MOD
| ML
|-
| G7
| MOD
| ML
| FH
| NMR
| NS
| BM
|-
| G8
| RS
| BM
| NS
| ZE
| FH
| NMR
|-
| G9
| BM
| ZE
| RS
| NS
| HE
| FH
|}


===Report Submission and Grading===


Reports should be emailed in PDF format to the instructor at marriage@pha.jhu.edu. The reports are due by midnight on the day before the "submitted" date in the schedule above. Late reports will not be accepted.


Grades breakdown as 15% for each 2-week lab (75% report, 25% presentation), 5% for the initial lab, and 5% participation.


====Grading====
===Data Reduction Notes===


The
* pdf: [[media:data_reduction_notes.pdf]], tex (change extension): [[media:data_reduction_notes.txt]], figs: [[media:gaussian_deviate.png]]
*Data for linear model example: [[media:Altitudes.txt]]; Code (change suffix to .py) [[media:Linear_model.txt]]; Output [[media:Data_linear.png]] [[media:Data with model linear.png]]
*Data for non-linear model and confidence interval example: [[media:counts.txt]]; Code (change sufixx to .py) [[media:Nonlinear_model.txt]]; Output [[media:Data_nonlinear.png]], [[media:Counts_with_fit.png]], [[media:Confidence_peak_constant_background.png]]
*Random Deviates Code (change to *.py): [[media:deviate.txt]]

Latest revision as of 00:05, 30 January 2012

Instructor: Tobias Marriage (marriage@pha.jhu.edu)

TAs: Arpit Gupta (arpit@pha.jhu.edu), Damien Benveniste (dbenveni@pha.jhu.edu)

Recommended Texts

  • Bevington & Robinson, Data Reduction and Error Analysis for the Physical Sciences
  • Press, Teukolsky, Vetterling, Flannery, Numerical Recipes in C (Available online)
  • Lamport, LaTeX: A Document Preparation System

General Description

In this class you will complete seven experiments. You'll do the experiments in groups. Separately you will analyze data and submit lab reports. The first experiment is short and will be done in the first week. The rest of the experiments are more involved and you will have two weeks to complete each.

Lab Reports

Lab reports constitute the backbone of the course. The reports are to be created on a computer with computer generated graphics, plots, etc. The document preparation system for the reports is LaTeX. The computers in the PUC lab have various installations of LaTeX editors/compilers. You can also download freeware for your personal computers. The lab reports should have an abstract, an introduction, description of the experiment (apparatus and procedure), description of the analysis, discussion of results, a conclusion (including future directions), and a bibliography. Lab reports will be collected on even weeks (See schedule.).

The course is fast paced and you'll want to stay ahead of schedule. You should begin writing your lab report in the first week of the class. You should plan to have the introduction finished by the end of the first week together with first drafts of all figures. A standard strategy is to create your figures first in order to guide the body of the text.

The first three lab reports will be "refereed" in the sense that we'll return them with comments on an initial draft of the reports after which you will resubmit the final draft of the reports.

Latex References


Lab Presentations

Lab presentations will be given on odd weeks (See schedule.). These consist in a few slides (saved as PDF) describing the experiment and a reduction of the corresponding data with preliminary conclusions and/or questions. Presentations should be sent to the instructor (marriage@pha.jhu.edu) the night before for efficient projector setup. Presentations are 10 minutes with 5 minutes for questions/comments. Participation in discussion is an important component of the presentations.

Sample presentation: media:Marriage_h_e_experiment.pdf


Course Schedule

Jan 31
Introductory Lecture; Photoelectric Effect
Feb 7
First Lab; Photoelectric report due
Feb 14
First Lab Presentations, Latex Tutorial
Feb 21
Second Lab Begins, First Report (Draft) Submitted
Feb 28
Second Lab Presentations, First Report (Draft) Returned
Mar 7
Third Lab Begins, Second Report (Draft) Submitted, First Report (Final) Submitted
Mar 14
Third Lab Presentations, Second Report (Draft) Returned
Mar 21
Spring Break
Mar 29
Fourth Lab Begins, Third Report (Draft) Submitted, Second Report (Final) Submitted
Apr 4
Fourth Lab Presentations, Third Report (Draft) Returned
Apr 12
Fifth Lab Begins, Third Report (Final) Submitted, Fourth Report (Final) Submitted
Apr 18
Fifth Lab Presentations
Apr 26
Sixth Lab Begins, Fifth Report Submitted
May 2
Sixth Lab Presentations
May 10
Sixth Report Submitted

Labs

Responsibility for assistance and grading of labs will be split between the professor and TAs in the following manner:

Marriage
Brownian Motion (BM), Nuclear Spectroscopy (NS), Franck-Hertz (FH)
Benveniste
Rutherford Scattering (RS), Millikan Oil Drop (MOD), Hall Effect (HE)
Gupta
NMR, Muon Lifetime (ML), Zeeman Effect (ZE)

The labs are done in groups according to the following schedule:

Lab 1 Lab 2 Lab 3 Lab 4 Lab 5 Lab 6
G1 NMR NS ML MOD BM HE
G2 NS RS ZE HE NMR MOD
G3 ML MOD BM FH ZE RS
G4 ZE HE NMR RS ML NS
G5 HE FH MOD ML RS ZE
G6 FH NMR HE BM MOD ML
G7 MOD ML FH NMR NS BM
G8 RS BM NS ZE FH NMR
G9 BM ZE RS NS HE FH

Report Submission and Grading

Reports should be emailed in PDF format to the instructor at marriage@pha.jhu.edu. The reports are due by midnight on the day before the "submitted" date in the schedule above. Late reports will not be accepted.

Grades breakdown as 15% for each 2-week lab (75% report, 25% presentation), 5% for the initial lab, and 5% participation.

Data Reduction Notes